A Randomized Phase II Trial of ATN-224 in Combination With Temozolomide or Temozolomide Followed by ATN-224 in Patients With Advanced Melanoma

Trial Information

A Randomized Phase II Trial of ATN-224 in Combination With Temozolomide or Temozolomide Followed by ATN-224 in Patients With Advanced Melanoma

According to the National Cancer Institute PDQ database, advanced melanoma is refractory to most standard systemic therapy, and all newly diagnosed patients should be considered candidates for clinical trials. Although advanced melanoma is relatively resistant to therapy, several biologic response modifiers and cytotoxic agents have been reported to produce objective responses. Once melanoma is metastatic, treatments are palliative rather than curative. In spite of many attempts at multimodality therapy, the prognosis in this disease remains poor. Further agents are needed if progress is to be made with melanoma treatment.

ATN-224 is an orally active, small molecule that has been shown in cellular and animal models to be antiangiogenic and to have activity against melanoma cell lines. Clinical studies with a similar agent (ammonium tetrathiomolybdate) indicate that the agent can be administered continuously on a daily basis for years in some patients. ATN-224 has the potential to affect the progression of melanoma by mechanisms that include both antiangiogenic and antitumor pathways. Temozolomide, a commonly used agent for melanoma, also has a tolerable profile.

Inclusion Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

- Patients with histologically confirmed, advanced cutaneous melanoma. Advanced melanoma is defined as locally advanced disease that is not amenable to surgery or radiation therapy and metastatic disease. Patients may have had adjuvant treatment for prior early disease as long as it was given at least 6 months before the first dose of study medication, and the treatment did not contain temozolomide or dacarbazine. Previous treatment for advanced disease is acceptable as long as the patient did not receive temozolomide or dacarbazine. There is no restriction on the number of prior regimens.

- Patients must have adequate organ and marrow function as defined below:

- absolute neutrophil count ≥1,500/uL

- platelets ≥100,000/uL

- hemoglobin ≥9 g/dL

- total bilirubin ≤2 X institutional upper limit of normal (ULN)

- AST(SGOT) and ALT(SGPT) ≤2 X ULN

- creatinine clearance (measured or calculated) ≥30 mL/min

Patients are allowed to receive erythropoietin or blood transfusions before receiving their first dose of ATN-224 to bring the hemoglobin level to >9 g/dL to meet eligibility criteria.

- Use of adequate contraception. Temozolomide has the potential to cause fetal harm. The effects of ATN 224 on the developing human fetus at the recommended therapeutic dose are unknown, but antiangiogenic agents are known to be teratogenic. For these reasons women of child-bearing potential and men with partners of child-bearing potential must agree to use adequate contraception (hormonal and/or barrier method of birth control; abstinence) prior to study entry and for the duration of study participation through the follow up visit 28 days after the last dose of ATN 224 or temozolomide.

- Ability to understand and the willingness to sign a written informed consent document

- Uveal (ocular) melanoma

- Brain metastasis that has not been treated and remained stable for at least 4 weeks (In other words, patients are eligible if they have no metastases or if brain metastases have been treated and remain stable for at least 4 weeks)

- Patients may not be receiving any other investigational agents

- History of allergic reactions attributed to compounds of similar chemical or biologic composition to ATN-224 or omeprazole

- History of malabsorption syndromes or other gastrointestinal disorders that may affect ATN-224 or temozolomide absorption, including bowel obstruction, celiac disease, sprue, cystic fibrosis

- Patients known to be positive for HIV or infectious hepatitis type A, B or C

- No other prior malignancy is allowed except for the following: adequately treated basal cell or squamous cell skin cancer, in situ cervical cancer, adequately treated Stage I or II cancer from which the patient is currently in complete remission, or any other cancer from which the patient has been disease-free for 5 years

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